From AFT:
“Charity event will bring free
ball gowns to 600 military families. Sign up now.”
(Since it began in 2015,
Operation Deploy Your Dress has opened shops at 13 military bases to offer free
ball gowns to military families. The event was founded by, from left, Liz
McKenrick, Yvonne Coombes, Ronya Rendon, Melissa Riely and, not pictured, Renee
Chapman.)
Are you wondering what you’re
going to wear to that military ball, high school prom or other fancy event this
year? Operation Deploy Your Dress will hold a “pop-up” event April 30
offering free dresses to about 600 people in the military community. Although
it is being held at the headquarters of the Association of the U.S. Army in
Arlington, Virginia, the event is open to people from all of the service
branches, including those in the Guard and reserves. Those eligible are service
members and military family members, including dependents age 12 and older. If
the child doesn’t have a military ID card, they can come with their mother or
stepmother who has a military ID. You must register here to attend the
event; bring your registration ticket and military/dependent ID to be admitted.
This is the fifth annual pop-up
dress event held at AUSA. Not to worry if you don’t live in the Washington,
D.C., metropolitan area. There are now 13 boutiques operated by Operation
Deploy Your Dress located on military bases, including a dozen stateside Army
or joint bases and one in Landstuhl, Germany. Check here for locations of the
shops and information about days and hours of operation.
Since Operation Deploy Your Dress
began in 2015, it has “re-deployed” more than 16,000 gowns from those 13 shops,
saving military families an estimated $3 million, said Corrie Andreacchio,
marketing director for the organization. The organization’s pop-up events and
boutiques accept donations of new or gently used gowns and accessories.
Eligible shoppers can choose one dress and one accessory.
The April 30 event will be held
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., with 75 registered customers for each hour, Andreacchio
said. That adds up to 600 customers throughout the day. After each hour’s
session, dresses will be refreshed and new dresses will be introduced for the
next group. The show floor and fitting rooms will be sanitized in between each
group. ODYD began at Fort Bliss in late 2015, when founders Renee Chapman,
Ronya Rendon, Yvonne Coombes, Liz McKenrick and Melissa Riely decided to
organize a dress swap among their units’ spouses, and saw a need for a larger
effort.
These formal events can be
expensive, and ODYD’s mission is to defray the costs of buying formal wear. Customers
over the years have included military families representing a variety of ranks.
Young spouses new to the military, and some who been affiliated with the
military for years but have never attended a military ball, and military youth
buying prom dresses are among those customers. For those who would like to
donate dresses or accessories, the shops that are most in need of dresses are
those at Fort Stewart, Georgia; Fort Polk, Louisiana, and Fort Irwin,
California. The AUSA April 30 pop-up event also needs dresses and accessories.
No shoes are accepted.
^ This is such a great idea. I
knew there were places doing this for non-Military Families for Proms,
Weddings, etc., but Military Families need this too. ^
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